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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1927)
H E IM IS T 0 1 SO UND JUDGM ENT TH EA TR E F R I D A Y and S A T U R D A Y JULY 22 and 23 REGINALD DENNY “W here W as I?” Is a result of experience. S U N D A Y and M O N D A Y JULY 24 and 25 * Experience it the fruit of action. It may be pleasant or un pleasant. In the gaining of experience the individual makes pro fits and takes losses. “THE TEASER” WIH AN ALL STAR CAST A bank is able to know the experience of the citizens of a com munity in fuller measure than any other agency. The expert nee we have gained in handling business under local conditions during tKe 20 years since Hermiston became a town is at the service of every customer. T U E S D A Y -W E D N E S D A Y JULY 26 and 27 “THE M AN UPSTAIRS” A GOOD PICTURE First N ational Bank F R I D A Y and S A T U R D A Y JULY 29 and 30 of Hermiston Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profit* O ver $50,000 P. B. Swayze, Pres. R. Alexader, Vlce-Prea, A. H. Norton, Cashier W. L. Hamm, Asst. Cashier FEED PRICE QUOTATIONS (Furnished by Farm Bureau Co-oper ative of Hermiston. Unless other wise specified, prices are per hundred weight.) Scratch, 100s ............................... $2.52 Bran, 60s ............ i . oj Egg Mash ...................................... 2.52 Ground Oats '................................... 2.25 Grjund Barley ............................... 2.15 Wheat ............. 2’.50 Corn, No. 2 .................................... 2.25 Cracked Corn, No. 2..................... 2.35 Ground Corn, No. 2.................... 2.35 Mill Run, 80s ............................... 1.44 Cow Feed ........................................ 2.32 Ground Wheat ........................ 2.60 Shorts, 80s ...................................... 1.52 Rolled Barley ............................... 1.75 Calf Meal, per pound.................... 3 He Middlings ........................................ 1.90 Oyster shell ..........................................go Whole Oats ...................................... 2.15 Salt, half ground 50s........................45 -FOR SALE— Household goods, fur niture and dishes. Mrs. J. C. Downing. 46-tfc FOP SALE— A fresh Holstein cow. E. I. Davis. 46-2tc Harvest Chinaware. — Most every thing and most for your money. Schafer’s Variety Store, Pendleton. 45-2tc Good Blue Grass Pasture, $2.00 per month. W. A. Leathers. 45-tfc FOR SALE OR TRADE— Good gentle work team. Will take gentle sad dle pony, hogs or hay. E. G. Som mers. 45-tfc FOR RENT— Six room modern house, west side. See Janus Todd 45-tfc — A BIG SPECIAL— “THE COUNTRY BEYOND” (From the Famous Novel by James Oliver Cnrwood) Starring Olive Borden Prices 10-30c Two Shows— 7:45 and 9:45 Cigar«, Tobacco FOR SALE-^-Northern Pacific lands a t prlce8 ranging from $5 to $21, 1-10 down and 10 annual install ments at 6 per cent. Yearly im provement required. Under McKay water. Good soil, practically level. Make application to E. P. Dodd or J. W. Messner, Hermiston, Oregon. B arber Shop WHAT IS ADVERTISING? B ert M ullins APARTMENTS For Rent. See Porter, across from K ellogg’s garage. 4 2-4tc H o m e C ookin g “Advertising is the education of the public as to what you are, where you are, and what you have to offer in the way of skill, talent or com modity. The only man who should not advertise is the man who has nothing to offer the world in the way of commodity or service.” — Elbert Hubbard. IS OUR SPECIALTY HOME MADE PASTRY Good practical sewing done at rea sonable Prices. Mrs. Fred Earn- heart. 42-2tp FOR SALE— Good Jersey milk, morn ing and evening deliveries. Milk on Ice at the house at all hours. Phone 25-M. H. S. Hanby. 42-tfc FOR SALE— W. Leghorn wing-band ed pedigreed cockerels. Trap nest records 250-274 egg dams mated to males of 280-316 egg parentage. Also another lot 225- 249 egg dams mated to males of 280-316 egg parentage. Attract ive price on large orders. Phone 41-4tc 42-J-5. Try Burk's for Bargains. 39-tfc FOR SALE— 1 Big 6 McCormick mower; 1 hay rake. Inland Empire 39-tfc Lumber Co. SHORT ORDERS AT ALL HOUR! Open 5:30 to 9:30. REX CAFE ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ IF IT S ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ YOU WANT ♦ ♦ • CALI 25-J ❖ COUNTRY HAULS S0LICITE1 ♦ ♦ S MlbC n i J A H E0U8 T . H . G aith er TRANSFER AND DRAY Insurance Salesman Wanted A competent hustler to repre- s nt an old established insurance company. Can work part or full time. — READ THE WANT ADS— Burk’s, headquarters for Army Shoes. 39-tfc Read The Herald Want Ads. Watch, clock and Jewelry repairing. 8ee Newell, next door to Sappers. ll- t f* Polands for Profits. Stillings. 37tf Burk’s for Bargains. 3Í-tfc REAL BOTATE EXCHANGES AND INSURANCE, i . M. BIGGS, RE ALTOR. 26«c ADDINO machina rolla at the Herald omaa. FOR SALE—Addlng machine rolls at the Herald office. Hermlaton Second Hand Store.— Fnrnltnre and Hardware, Bee Sup pliée, Harness, Saddles. Wagons. 35-3fc Herald Want Adi Bring Yoa Resnlto Want Ads Bring Results Summer Hours at Hermlnton Lib rary are from 3 to 5 P. M. 3#-tfc FAMILY WASHING and Ironing wanted. Mrs. N. Dolven. Phone 5S-J-2. 42-4tp READ THE WANT ADR •"T Turkeys, Turkeys Had Humble Beginning The first express company "in the United States was launched about 88 years ago, when the following “ad" appeared In the New York and Bos ton papers announcing Its Inception: “William F. Hamden lias made ar rangements with the Providence rail road and the New York Boat company to run a car through from Boston to New York and vice versa, four times weekly. He will accompany the car himself, take care of nil packages that may be entrusted to him and see same 8ufely delivered." Evidently Hamden would be the Ideal promoter If he were alive today, for his ear was purely a figment of the Imagination, lie carried the pack ages himself In a valise, arid as he had formerly been a conductor on the railroad his old associates permitted him to travel free. Hamden's first real competitor was Alvin Adams, who founded the Adams Express company. , President Andrew Jackson was among the first Presidents to recog nize the power of the press and the value of Its support In a political cam paign. Not long after his Inauguration some of Ids advisers decided that It was highly Important to have a news paper In Washington. They organized the Washington Globe and started It on an Immediate paying basis by the simple procedure of making a subscriber of every fed eral ofilceholder wiiose salary tvns more thnn $1.000 n year. The hand picked subscribers were sent the pa per and a bill for a year’s subscrip tion. Most of them paid promptly and with ns good grace as they could smn mon. A few balked, and these were told they could either pay up or get nnolher Job. They paid.—Kansas City Tittles. E arly C aterpillar R ecord C old N uggets SERVICE FOR SALE— No. 1 fresh eowa. B. o 37-tfe ♦ Hammer. VINEYARD LODGE NO. 2$(, I. O. O. The fact that certain metals will mix F. meets each Monday evening in Odd to form alloys with a grenter variety Fellows’ hall. Visiting members eor- of properties Than either of the orig dially invited. inal metals Is of great Importance to Industry. W. R. Longhorn, Secretary. Usually, an alloy will melt at a Childs Barham, N. O. much lower temperature than either of the metals of which It Is composed. PROFESSIONAL CARBS Solder, a mixture of tin and lead. Is an example. D R . C. M. D A LE Alloys can he produced to suit cir cumstances In which plain metals D E N T IS T R Y would fall. Brass Is hard, yet easily turned, and *0 is adapted to purposes Office In Bank Bldg. for which Its components, zinc and Evening by appointment. copper, would he unsuitable. By rnlx log nine parts of copper with one of W. J. W ARNER NOTICE tlu. the very tough, hard alloy known On and after Friday. July 22, the ns gun metal Is produced. The Attorney-at-Law onunce of hell-mctal Is obtained hv following admission prices at Play mixing tin and copper In certain (fro house theatre will prevail, except for Hermiston portions. special attractions and road shows: Even our coinage Is made up of al 1 Children between the ages of 6 and toys, the gold and sliver being mixed 12, 10 cents; adults, 30 cents. h s. M c K enzie , m . d - with small priqiortlnns of other metals, •» HARRY KLINE. Mgr. chiefly for the sake of giving greater Eye. Ear- Nose amd Throat durability to the coins. Office: 1-2-3 Inland Empire Bids, Alloys, too, call Into use metals that Pendleton, Oregon are of no great value by themselves Antimony Is of little use In Itself, b ill It Is of great use In hardening other JAMES L. SEARS, X. D. metals and enters Into the composition I want them, now. or next of type-metal and Britannia ware. Physician and Surgeon week, or any time. W ill buy whole flocks,, part flocks, young Office Phone 733. Res. Phone T U Great Express Line» or old. Figund with me before Office in First National Bank A le . you sell. A Hampstead corre«|>on<lent recalls that nearly seventy years aim he saw In llyde park a trial of a military train of wagons loaded with soldiers dressed In fatigue jackets and drawn by a Rteani engine hearing the name India. This engine, he says, laid and raised Its own track, each “slipper" being apparently about four feel long, mounted, and revolving on rollers much like the modern caterpillar movement. The experiment, accord Ing to the London Post, appeared to aim at Improved military transport, and the men hnnled would probably number about 200 In eight wagons. WE SERVE 40c LUNCH FROM 11:30 TILL 3 :0 0 P. M. Fried Chicken, home style, SOo The largest gold nugget in the world Is the Welcome nugget, from Aus traliii. This was found In Bakery Idll Ballarat, Victoria, Australia, Jane It, 1858, nt a depth of ISO feet. Il weigh. 2,11)5 troy ounces and Is probably one of the purest and largest masses of 1 gold ever recorded. Il Is approximate ! ly B9 per cent. One of the largest 1 masses of gold (by some called nug get) In California was found in 1SUO i in the Monumental mine. In the B illie s of Sierra county, Calif. It weighs 1,- 5110 troy ounces and has an approxi mate value of $20,000. Address: For Shoe R epairing You can’t beat the service and workmanship we have. M odern M ach in ery P . O . B ox 4 5 6 , L a G rande, Ore. UMATILLA ITEMS ■FWCIAL OOnUBVOITDBNCB Frank Jameg left Sunday for Can ada where be will spend bis vaca tion. The best money can bay is the only equipment we w ill use. M. N. Jenkin, C. G. Potter, Gust Fraslaa. Henry Priddy and W. H. FOUR SKILLED WORKMEN Shepherd attended- the executive ses sion of shop crafts which was held Are busy in the shop all of the in Pendleton Monday and Tuesday. itme which insures fast service. The meeting was held to elect chair men of each craft and work pertain ing to the order. Jess Connell returned from Port land Tuesday after being In 8t. Vin cent’s hospital the past month con 643 Main Street valescing after an operation. PENDLETON, OREGON Mart Griffin made a business trip to Walla Walla Monday. Al Kennedy returned Saturday from Spokane whore he had spent a week with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stone kprnt Monday In Walia Walla with friends. The Kendler boys left last week Send us the price o f a year’i for the harvest fields. subscription if you are in arrears Mr*. John Marrhali and aon mot ored to La Grande Monday to visit relatives. Mr. and Mrs W. H, Shepherd left Pendleton Shoe Shop D O IT N O W We Need the Money LODGE DIRECTORY Her PuniAtnenf Dora had heen £ had girl, and her mother decided that a lecture would do a deal of roc .,: Accordingly, she Called her daughter on one aide and the lecture took place. “Dora,” admonished the girl's moth er, “you must stop this abominable flirting. Remember, you'll be pun ished In the endI" “Buf, mother," pictested (lie girt, "1 have henrd that yon flirted, yourself, and you've never been punished." The older woman frowned. “Child," she returned with great so- lemnlty. "some day I want yon to make a dose study of your father.“— London Answers. G ilbert S m ith DR. DAVID S. ROWE, Address HERMISTON, OREGON Telephone, Echo, 15-F-14 Specializing in Acute and ChreRto Term of O pprobrium Fakir Is u word that has come to us from the Fur East where II literally means a poor man, a Muhotnmeilun re llglous mendicant, who Espouses pov erty ns being In harmony with his sense of spiritual Insignificance. The life is one of Inactivity. Many of these ascetics are sincere, but many were humbugs and so In the West the word “fakir" has come to mean much the same as mountebank, an Imposter, especially In mutters relating to re ligion. Tuesday evening for a two week«’ visit with relatives and friends at Dallas. Howard Shepherd of Porland is making an extended visit. at the A. E. McFarland home. Mr. and Mrs. Preston Hanson and Mrs. James Byrnes and daughters were Pendleton shoppers Tuesday. Y eom an Farm ers Mr. and Mrs. Ben Spencer and Yeoman Is a smull farmer or coun daughter spent Tuesday at the J. A. try man, hut II Is used generally Io Reeves home In Hermiston. Indicate a landowner working his own Mr. and Mrs. Les Blakeley spent farm. A military corps known as the week end In Portland. Yeomen of Ihe Guards was formed In Grant Walsh and Morris Potter England by Henry VII. The Yeomnn left last week for the harvest fields. ry was a body of volunteers formed Gust Frazolas returned Sunday I during tbe wars with Napoleon, and ) organized accordlug to connlles. Yeo- night from his vacation In Portland. i inenry regiments were also raised dor- James Cole left Monday for Spo : ing the South African war. kane where he will spend his vaca Their Omission tion with friends. Andrey's mamma had taken her to Mr. Harvey, Mrs. Ford’s father, the picture show, and as the prelim was taken seriously III Sunday and Inary explanations began to nnroll taken to St. Anthony hospital In i the child evidenced Increasing Inter Pendleton. ! cat. After she had read. "Story by Mrs. John Marshall and son re Pendally. directed by Puffer, pholo turned Wednesday after visiting re graphed by Snnpp, assisted by Shot!. I titles by Begad and Ilegash. criticisms latives In La Orande. ' by Orlrnm, costumes by Scant and Charles Hoskins, deputy sheriff, I Short, passed by the national board transacted business la Hermiston of censorship," she began to langh. "Manimn," she gaily sold, “they Monday. ' haven’t (old who removed Ihe gentle- mnn'a Appomattox. or whv.'V— Ksnian - T I T THE HERALD WANT ADS— I (Xu- Star. -« J M L fc k Chiropractor and Physiotherapist Disease. Subscribe For The Herald Location, 2 doors west of Fostofflee Hours, 10 to 6. and by appointment. Office Phone 303 Res. Phone $11 HERMISTON, OREGON i J. L. V A U G H A N 3 206 East Court St. ■ ANY AND ■ E verthing E lectrical “Shook U p ” Officeholders F O U N T A IN FOR SALE— Equity in small place, close In, price mighty reasonable. Inquire Herald. 46-tfc of Metals Add» to Their Value " D * 6 « in g " FOR YOU SU M M E R E X C U R S IO N FA R ES IN EFFECT MAY 22 TO SEPT. 30 RETURN LIM IT OCTOBER 31,1921 R O U N D T R IP TO D E N V E R .............. $67.20 OM AHA 70.26 K A N SA S C IT Y 7O.3S D E S M O IN E S ........ 76 .2 0 S T . L O U IS ............ 80.22 C H IC A G O ...... 85.06 D E T R O I T ............ 104.07 C IN C IN N A T I 102.16 CLEVELAND 107.61 TORONTO 112.80 ATLANTA 116.40 P IT T S B U R G H 118.81 W A S H IN G T O N 110.61 P H IL A D E L P H IA 142.97 N E W Y O R K ....... 146.46 B O S T O N .................. 162.61 Low fares also to other points in Middle West, South and East. L ib eral etopovere perm it vieiting Z io n N a tio n a l P a rk O rand Canyon N a tio n a l P a rk Y ello w s to n e N a tio n a l P a rk Rooky M o u n tain N a t’l P a rk Phone 139 Pendleton, Ore. TOX OVERLAND ROUTS aRw|OK F. C. Woughter, Agent, Hermiston, Oregon jB feKwf (JHggy H erm iston T ran sfer We Haul ANYTHING "ANYWHERE ANYTIME TEI,EPH0NE 31 L. J. M cA tee FAINTS, WALLPAPER, PICTURE MOULDINGS AND GLASS CONTRACTING 513 Main St. This coupon and 25c entitle the under- signed to one 35c can of Acme Quality Bnamel-Kote, any color, and a special 20c Paint Brush. Phone 189 Pendleton, Oregon. Addreaa.. To acquaint you with Acme Quality, we are making a spe cial offer for a short time only. SPECIAL OFFER For health and appearance sake H erm iston H ospital Maternity Cases our Specialty 0UE MOTTO: FAIRNESS AND SERVICE Come and see us about our new and reasonable rates. Graduate nurse in attendance at all times. TELEPHONE 881 beware the splintery floor T h in k o f y o u r w ood floors— you r k itch en floors — th « sta irs th a t lead to th e cellar or b a sem en t — th e eth er u n d er-foot su rfaces th a t n eed a tte n tio n . B e a u tify th em I G iv e th em a good d urable co a t o f A cm e Q u a lity G ranite F loor E n a m el. It d oes m ore. I t arm or- co a ts th e floor. I t p rev en ts w ear and tea r— d ocs a w a y w ith th e scuffing up o f sp lin ters w hich h elp t o harbor d irt and n o t o n ly m ake m ore scru bb ing n ecessa ry , b u t all scru bb ing d ifficult. ACME QUALITY Paint^Varnish P a in t u p — a n d w h en y o u d o u se A c m e Q u a lity . T h en sa tisfa ctio n w ill b e sure. S ee u s to d a y a b o u t y o u r p a in tin g prob lem s. BLESSING HARDWARE CO. HERMISTON, OREGON. | ■ !■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ For I llu s tr a te d B ook lets, Reservations and Information, address Agent named below. U N IO N P A C IF IC S ® W e H ave A n ticip ated Your needs in everything th a t is necessary to com plete your golf outfit. C om e in and g iv e our line th e “on ce over.” HITT Legal Blanks for Sale at This Office